Wild bees enhance honey bees’ pollination of hybrid sunflower

Princeton University · University of California, Berkeley

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Abstract

Pollinators are required for producing 15-30% of the human food supply, and farmers rely on managed honey bees throughout the world to provide these services. Yet honey bees are not always the most efficient pollinators of all crops and are declining in various parts of the world. Crop pollination shortages are becoming increasingly common. We found that behavioral interactions between wild and honey bees increase the pollination efficiency of honey bees on hybrid sunflower up to 5-fold, effectively doubling honey bee pollination services on the average field. These indirect contributions caused by interspecific interactions between wild and honey bees were more than five times more important than the…

Citation impact

696
total citations
FWCI
42.78
Percentile
100%
References
51
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Pollination
  • Pollinator
  • Biology
  • Honey bee
  • Pollination management
  • Interspecific competition
  • Sunflower
  • Ecology
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Zero hunger
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